Some realities even the best propagandists can't spin. In May 1942, a team of Goebbels's cameramen shot footage in the Warsaw Ghetto, recording some of its appalling misery, but also staging scenes of rich Jews wallowing in luxury. The apparent intention was to make a screed proving that the Jews' greed was to blame for their own suffering, but instead the film ended up unedited in cans in an archive, where it remained till after the war.

Yael Hersonski takes this footage, much of it consisting of starving figures stumbling down streets littered with corpses, and intercuts it with re-enacted testimony given by one of the Nazi cameramen at a post-war trial, and also with shots of Ghetto survivors watching the Nazi footage today.

She doesn't pull these pieces together, but some are unforgettable, as when an elderly survivor recoils from horrors filmed seven decades ago and then says, "I'm so happy I am human again and can cry."

Review: Irene in Time Luckless in love, Irene (Tanna Frederick) wants to "find a guy like my daddy." Her father, she says (over and over and over), "was really magical." Truth be told, her absent dad doesn't seem like that great a guy.

Review: The Slammin' Salmon Here's how the shit version of Waiting likely came to be: the Broken Lizard boys (David Heffernan directs) thought the concept of a boxing-champ-turned-Miami-restaurateur was funny, and they wrote and shot a major motion picture without bothering to design a plot.

Review: Sherlock Holmes In its own way an ideal holiday blockbuster for the moderately educated, the new light-footed overhaul of Sherlock Holmes is three parts self-satisfied mixer to one part hard storytelling, and if anything, the film's popular trailers should have deterred you from expecting strong drink.

Review: A Single Man Christopher Isherwood published his novel about a middle-aged homosexual grieving for a lost lover, the frank depiction of gay desire scandalized some readers.

Review: Mystery Team Indie comedy has it tough in the marketplace, so though it's no fun to pan the first feature by the Derrick Comedy troupe, neither was it fun to watch Mystery Team .

Review: Legion What are angel wings made of? Why, bulletproof titanium with razor-sharp tips to slice open the entrails of sinners.

Review: Tooth Fairy Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson dons a pink tutu and wings as Derek, a hockey player who's earned the nickname "The Tooth Fairy" for his knack for knocking out opposing players' bicuspids on the ice.